Optimal Linear Estimation Under Unknown Nonlinear Transform

Abstract

Linear regression studies the problem of estimating a model parameter $\beta^* \in \R^p$, from $n$ observations $\{(y_i,x_i)\}_{i=1}^n$ from linear model $y_i = \langle \x_i,\beta^* \rangle + \epsilon_i$. We consider a significant generalization in which the relationship between $\langle x_i,\beta^* \rangle$ and $y_i$ is noisy, quantized to a single bit, potentially nonlinear, noninvertible, as well as unknown. This model is known as the single-index model in statistics, and, among other things, it represents a significant generalization of one-bit compressed sensing. We propose a novel spectral-based estimation procedure and show that we can recover $\beta^*$ in settings (i.e., classes of link function $f$) where previous algorithms fail. In general, our algorithm requires only very mild restrictions on the (unknown) functional relationship between $y_i$ and $\langle x_i,\beta^* \rangle$. We also consider the high dimensional setting where $\beta^*$ is sparse, and introduce a two-stage nonconvex framework that addresses estimation challenges in high dimensional regimes where $p \gg n$. For a broad class of link functions between $\langle x_i,\beta^* \rangle$ and $y_i$, we establish minimax lower bounds that demonstrate the optimality of our estimators in both the classical and high dimensional regimes.

Cite

Text

Yi et al. "Optimal Linear Estimation Under Unknown Nonlinear Transform." Neural Information Processing Systems, 2015.

Markdown

[Yi et al. "Optimal Linear Estimation Under Unknown Nonlinear Transform." Neural Information Processing Systems, 2015.](https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2015/yi2015neurips-optimal/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{yi2015neurips-optimal,
  title     = {{Optimal Linear Estimation Under Unknown Nonlinear Transform}},
  author    = {Yi, Xinyang and Wang, Zhaoran and Caramanis, Constantine and Liu, Han},
  booktitle = {Neural Information Processing Systems},
  year      = {2015},
  pages     = {1549-1557},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2015/yi2015neurips-optimal/}
}